Aichi International Broadcasting Explained

JOGW-FM
City:Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture
Area:Aichi Prefecture
Branding:Radio-I
Frequency:79.5 MHz
Translator:79.9 FM in Hamamatsu and southern Shizuoka Prefecture
83.0 FM in the southern districts of Aichi Prefecture from Toyohashi
Format:World ethnic, Top 40 and Album-oriented rock
Language:Multiethnic
Power:5kW
Haat:856 meters
Affiliations:Megalopolis Radio Network
Owner:Kowa Co., Ltd.
Licensee:Aichi International Broadcasting Co., Ltd.

Radio-i (JOGW-FM) was a multilingual commercial radio station[1] based in central Japan in Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, owned by the Kowa Company.[2]

Nagoya University cited this station along with rival ZIP-FM (JFL, 77.8 MHz) as sources[3] [4] of multilingual information during emergencies. In times of disaster the station could broadcast vital information to listeners in Chinese, English, Simple Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish and Tagalog.[5]

Set up as, Radio-i commenced operations on April 1, 2000, and was the third of a series of radio stations created to bring a more international scope to local regions across Japan (they form the MegaNet.) The station broadcast on three frequencies, 79.5 FM in Nagoya and across Aichi Prefecture, 79.9 FM in Hamamatsu and southern Shizuoka Prefecture, and on 83.0 FM in the southern districts of Aichi Prefecture from Toyohashi. Playing a mixture of Top 40 and Album-oriented rock formats, Radio-i featured a team of mostly bilingual radio DJs handling the main programs.

Citing falling advertising revenue and ratings in the Aichi region, Radio-i ceased broadcasting operations on September 30, 2010, after 10 years and 5 months on the air. After a 17-hour live broadcast featuring current and past DJs, the last song played was ABBA - "Thank You For the Music", and broadcasting ceased at midnight after station ID. With the loss of carrier at 12:02 am, Radio-i became the first civilian radio station in the history of Japanese peacetime broadcasting to completely cease operations.

At the time the station closed, the DJ lineup featured Cocoro in the mornings, afternoons had Australian DJ Chris Glenn followed by Eri Sano, with evenings DJ'd by Yuko Takeda. Other main DJs included Hana Shintani and Sudo Ryumi. The Sorensen Media Group[6] in Guam provided some of the original radio programming for both Radio-i Nagoya and InterFM Tokyo.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Japan's Experience of Language Contact: A Case Study of RADIO-i . https://web.archive.org/web/20081203114142/http://www.multilingual-matters.net/laic/005/laic0050248.htm . dead . 2008-12-03 . Sanae Tsuda . Language and Intercultural Communication Vol. 5, Nos. 3 & 4, pp. 248–263 . 1470-8477 . 2005 . This paper … isolates the rationale for the existence of a multilingual radio station, RADIO-i, and examines why its listeners prefer it to a monolingual alternative. .
  2. Web site: History of the Kowa Group (2000-2004:Arrival of the 21st Century). kowa.com. 2011. Kowa Co., Ltd. fully entered the FM radio broadcasting business through Aichi International Broadcasting Co., Ltd. The broadcasting range of the company covers the whole Chubu region..
  3. Web site: Guide for Earthquake Disaster Preparedness . .
  4. Web site: Information for International Students . Nagoya University Education Center for International Students . 2007-11-03 . https://archive.today/20121218222336/http://www.ecis.nagoya-u.ac.jp/en/info/life/clife.html . 2012-12-18 . dead .
  5. Web site: In time of Disaster . Radio-i website . 2007-11-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071031103411/http://www.radio-i.co.jp/disaster.php . 2007-10-31 . dead .
  6. Web site: Asian radio programming . Sorensen Media Group . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070422160631/http://sorensenmediagroup.com/asianradio.htm . 2007-04-22 .